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Michele Woodward Executive Life Coach
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Powerful Coaching. Powerful Results.
June 1, 2009
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School's Almost Out Edition
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Greetings!
You want to know how to change.
You want to know how to serve your priorities
and your values.
You want to know how to do stuff
differently.
I know you want this, because you've told me.
You say, "Why do I keep facing the same stuff
all the time? Why can't I do things
differently?"
Well, how about this: When normal's not
working for you, just make a new normal.
Meredith is unhappy in her work. She has a
boss who says one thing and does another, and
the ground is always shifting beneath her
feet. Her normal is stressful, unpleasant,
unhappy and needs to change. She knows
this.
However, there's this issue of the economy,
and her deep-seated belief that she should be
able to turn the situation around, and that
she shouldn't walk away from a challenge, and
that maybe she's doing something really,
really wrong and there's no job that would be
any different.
Her normal sucks.
But the way she's looking at the prospect of
a new normal equally sucks.
Unless...
Unless she can change just one thing. One
tiny little thing. Toward a new way of being.
Toward a new perspective. Toward a new
normal.
Like, maybe, starting with a difficult
conversation with her mercurial boss. Maybe,
just maybe, calling him out on his
inconsistencies. In a productive and
collegial way, of course. By doing this one
little thing, she'll shift her quiet, don't
rock the boat, please-please-like-me normal
into something a little stronger, a little
prouder, a little better.
A new, happier, normal.
One area many clients have difficulty with is
having difficult conversations. Does just
reading that make your teeth grind? OK,
difficult conversations are... difficult.
Speaking up can be hard. Saying something
that might, possibly hurt someone's feelings
is so scary that many of us avoid saying
anything.
And we internalize those icky emotions and
end up all sick and unhappy and psychically
smoooshed.
But when we create a new normal -- a normal
where we say what's hard when it's just a
little bit hard, rather than waiting
until until it's big time hard -- we
break the old patterns and create a new way
of handling "hard".
Habits are tough to break, mostly because
they feel so known and, therefore, feel
rather safe. A new normal can seem impossible
to get, because we're so familiar with what
we've got.
Got to open your eyes to the possibilities,
darlings, and dare to live a new normal.
Because the payoff is big. The payoff is a
life of your own design, doing things you
like doing, with people you enjoy.
Change is possible, and good. Happiness is
attainable. Hey, happiness -- it's your new
normal.
I cannot believe I started writing a blog
in 2006! Seems like yesterday. Want to walk
thru the past? Click
here.
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INSPIRATIONAL QUOTE DU JOUR
"If you keep doing things like you've always
done them, what you'll get is what you've
already got."
-- Anonymous
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UPCOMING EVENTS
Cool new event set for this coming Friday,
June 5th -- The Results Club for Journalists!
There are a ton of displaced writers out
there who need to figure out how to reinvent
themselves for the new media landscape. In
this great 75-minute class, journalists will
learn how to identify and then "sell" their
transferable skills, work up an effective
resume, network and do a killer interview. To
register: www.resultsclubcoaching.com.
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SOMETHING TO READ
The Help by Kathryn Stockett
Life is not always one way or the other. All
Yankees fans don't hate all Red Sox fans.
All men aren't jerks and all women aren't
gold diggers.
And all white Southern
women
who employed black maids in Mississippi in
the early 60s weren't cruel and all black
maids employed by white women weren't abused.
Yes, some were. But some women were able to
rise above time, and norms, and do what it is
women do best -- connect on a deep and
intimate level with one another, based on
mutuality. That's what the book The
Help by Kathryn Stockett is all about.
Set in Mississippi at the height of the civil
rights movement, the book chronicles the
lives of black maids and white women -- what
separates them, and what divides them.
Stockett writes like a Southerner should, and
her use of idiom and phrase was spot on.
I enjoyed The
Help and found myself, once again,
marveling at the love that can grow in the
most unlikely places among the most unlikely
of people.
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Michele Woodward
Michele Woodward Consulting, Inc.
phone:
703/598-3100
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